136 N.W. 92 | S.D. | 1912
Lead Opinion
This action was brought to recover damages which plaintiff alleged he had suffered through the acts of defendants. Upon the trial before the circuit court and jury, defendants objected to the introduction of any evidence under the complaint, basing their objection upon the ground that such complaint did not state facts constituting a cause of action. The objection was sustained, and verdict for defendants directed. Judgment having been rendered upon such verdict, plaintiff appealed to this court, and in his brief states: “There is but one question in this case. Plaintiff contends that he is entitled to recover for incidental and consequential damages. Defendant resists this contention, and claims that, inasmuch as the defendant constructed and are operating their line of railway upon their own land, the plaintiff, even though damaged, cannot recover.” The cause has been presented to this court, both by the briefs and oral arguments, as though it were an appeal from an order sustaining a demurrer to the complaint when such demurrer had been interposed before answer, and it will be SO' treated by this court.
The facts which such demurrer would admit are, in substance, as follows: Plaintiff is the owner of numerous lots in a row of blocks running east and west within, but at the extreme southern end of, the city of Aberdeen. There is no highway on the south side of such.blocks, but there is a street along the north side thereof, and there are streets between such blocks,
The cases holding to this narrow construction of the word “property,” and holding that no -recovery could be had under a constitutional provision guaranteeing recompense only where there had been a “taking” of the thing, were clearly in error, both in giving too narrow a meaning to the word “property” and also in holding that the right of recovery rested upon the Constitution rather than upon the common law or. upon an inherent right superior to any legislative enactment. The result of these decisions was that many of the states amended- their Constitutions by inserting therein, the word’s “or damaged” or equivalent words, making them read, in effect, the same as the provision of our Constitution above quoted. The fact, however, remains that the right to recover damages, whether the injury flows from a “taking” or a “damaging” of -the property, is a right not -coming from the Constitution; the only effects of the constitutional provisions being to prevent the Legislatures from- -depriving the people of such -right, and granting the right, under Constitutions such as ours, of preventing the “taking” or “damaging” until the recompense is made. We think there can be no- question but that the including of the words “or damaged” does not broaden the effect of the constitutional provision over what it would be were the-•word “taken” alone u-sed and) the word “property” given its broad meaning, as -given to it in the New Hampshire cases, supra,, and that the including of such words does not extend the right o-f recovery to include that for any injury for which damages coulcl not have been recovered at -common law.
So in the case a-t bar, conceding that the plaintiff has been damaged in the -sum of $15,000, the question is: “Does it appear from the allegations of the complaint that such damages flow from an infringement of a superior right vested in -plaintiff, from what.
In its last analysis, the question of whether there is an infringement of a private right giving rise to- an action to recover for “damaging” property resolves itself into the one question: Did the party complained of so conduct its own business, as, under the circusmstances, to constitute the exercise- of its property rights a reasonable exercise thereof, and thus comply with the maxim,, “Sic utere tuo- ut alienum non laedas”? In determining this — in fact, the sole question before us in this case — we may discard as-absolutely immaterial the existan-ce of the -power of eminent do-main. Considering now the allegations of the complaint, we find the alleged -sources of damag-e divisible into two classes: (I) These resulting from the operation of the trains; (2) those re-
While a railway company has the implied right, under the power of eminent domain, to cross a public highway with its right of way, and thus impose a further public use upon that part of the highway — a use that must necessarily interfere to some extent with its use for other highway purposes — 'there is no such implied right to vacate and close any part of a highway upon the pretext that it is needed for railway purposes, and any such closing- would constitute a public nuisance, and be punishable as such.
It follows that we -must presume, there being no allegation to the contrary, that the defendants did not commit a criminal offense. and that the parts of the streets closed had been vacated by the duly qualified municipal body of the city of Aberdeen.
The learned author of Elliott on Roads (3d Ed.), at section 1180, says: “The right which an abutter enjoys as one of the public and in common with other citizens is not property in such a sense as to entitle him to compensation on the discontinuance of the road or street; but with respect to-the right which he has in the highway as a means of enjoying the free and convenient use of his abutting property it is radically different, for this right is a special one. If this special 'right is of value — and it is of value if it increases the worth of his abutting premises — then it is property, no matter whether it be of great or small value.” And at section 1181 further says: “Owners of lands abutting upon neighboring streets, or upon other parts of the same street, at least when beyond the next cross-street, are not, however, entitled to damages, notwithstanding the value of their lands may be lessened by its vacation or discontinuance.” One of the leading cases upon this question is that of Smith v. Boston, 7 Cush. (Mass.) 254, wherein the opinion was written by Chief Justice Shaw. What he said therein seems peculiarly applicable to the facts alleg-ed in the complaint herein: “The inconvenience of the petitioner is experienced by him in common with all the rest of the members of the community. He may feel it more, in consequence of the proximity of his lots and buildings; still it is a damage of like kind, and not in its nature peculiar or specific. The creation of a public nuisance, by placing an obstruction in a highway, can only be punished and suppressed by a public prosecution ; and though a man, who lives near it, and has occasion to pass it daily, suffers a damage altogether greater than one who lives at a distance, he can have no private action, because in its nature it is common and public. But if he suffers a peculiar and
The latter case, decided in 1902, seems to1 be a leading case upon the subject and directly in point in the case at bar. It appears from the statement of facts in that case that in 1888 the plaintiff owned two lots fronting on Ashland boulevard, in Chicago, and erected theron an expensive apartment building. In 1892 the defendant obtained, by purchase and condemnation proceeding's, a right of way through the same block, and located and constructed on said right of way, north of said premises, an-
The case o-f Searle v. City of Lead, 10 S. D. 312, 73 N. W. 101, 39 L. R. A. 345, is referred to and relied upon by the ap•pellant as sustaining his contention in the case at bar, but, upon examination of that case, it will be found to come within the rule laid down in Rigney v. City of Chicago, supra, and that it has no application to the case at bar. In- that case it will be noticed from an examination of the facts stated in the opinion the city was threatening to- raise the grade of the street 3feet in front of plaintiff’s property, and that the raising of the -grade would necessarily physically interfere with the plaintiff’s easement or
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).' The -only question properly presented by this appeal is whether, upon the allegations of the complaint, “liberally -construed, with a view of substantial justice between the parties,” the plaintiff is entitled to any relief. As I read the complaint, it discloses that the -defendant, the Minnesota, Dakota & Pacific Railway Company, a domestic -corporation, constructed a railroad into and through certain described portions of the -city of Aberdeen adjacent to- 1-o-ts then and now owned by the plaintiff; that -by reason of the oon-s-tructio-n and operation of such railroad -the plaintiff’s -property was and has been rendered “practically valueless”; that the plaintiff has received no compensation for the -damage thus caused; and that no proceeding has been heretofore instituted to ascertain the amount of such damage. So it is admitted that the plaintiff’s property was and has been rendered “practically valueless” by the -construction and operation of the -defendants’ railroad. In other words, it was and has been